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Metre (music)

In music, metre (British spelling) or meter (American spelling) refers to regularly recurring patterns and accents such as bars and beats. Unlike rhythm, metric onsets are not necessarily sounded, but are nevertheless implied by the performer (or performers) and expected by the listener.[not verified in body]

Musical and lyric metre

A variety of systems exist throughout the world for organising and playing metrical music, such as the Indian system of tala and similar systems in Arabic and African music.

Western music inherited the concept of metre from poetry,[1][2] where it denotes the number of lines in a verse, the number of syllables in each line, and the arrangement of those syllables as long or short, accented or unaccented.[1][2] The first coherent system of rhythmic notation in modern Western music was based on rhythmic modes derived from the basic types of metrical unit in the quantitative metre of classical ancient Greek and Latin poetry.[3]

Later music for dances such as the pavane and galliard consisted of musical phrases to accompany a fixed sequence of basic steps with a defined tempo and time signature. The English word "measure", originally an exact or just amount of time, came to denote either a poetic rhythm, a bar of music, or else an entire melodic verse or dance[4] involving sequences of notes, words, or movements that may last four, eight or sixteen bars.[citation needed]

Metre is related to and distinguished from pulse, rhythm (grouping), and beats:

Meter is the measurement of the number of pulses between more or less regularly recurring accents. Therefore, in order for meter to exist, some of the pulses in a series must be accented—marked for consciousness—relative to others. When pulses are thus counted within a metric context, they are referred to as beats.[5]

Metric structure edit

The term metre is not very precisely defined.[1] Stewart MacPherson preferred to speak of "time" and "rhythmic shape",[6] while Imogen Holst preferred "measured rhythm".[7] However, Justin London has written a book about musical metre, which "involves our initial perception as well as subsequent anticipation of a series of beats that we abstract from the rhythm surface of the music as it unfolds in time".[8] This "perception" and "abstraction" of rhythmic bar is the foundation of human instinctive musical participation, as when we divide a series of identical clock-ticks into "tick–tock–tick–tock".[1] "Rhythms of recurrence" arise from the interaction of two levels of motion, the faster providing the pulse and the slower organizing the beats into repetitive groups.[9] In his book The Rhythms of Tonal Music, Joel Lester notes that, "[o]nce a metric hierarchy has been established, we, as listeners, will maintain that organization as long as minimal evidence is present".[10]

 
Metric levels: beat level shown in middle with division levels above and multiple levels below.

"Meter may be defined as a regular, recurring pattern of strong and weak beats. This recurring pattern of durations is identified at the beginning of a composition by a meter signature (time signature). ... Although meter is generally indicated by time signatures, it is important to realize that meter is not simply a matter of notation".[11] A definition of musical metre requires the possibility of identifying a repeating pattern of accented pulses – a "pulse-group" – which corresponds to the foot in poetry.[citation needed] Frequently a pulse-group can be identified by taking the accented beat as the first pulse in the group and counting the pulses until the next accent.[12][1]

Frequently metres can be subdivided into a pattern of duples and triples.[12][1] For example, a 3
4
metre consists of three units of a 2
8
pulse group, and a 6
8
metre consists of two units of a 3
8
pulse group. In turn, metric bars may comprise 'metric groups' - for example, a musical phrase or melody might consist of two bars x 3
4
.[13]

The level of musical organisation implied by musical metre includes the most elementary levels of musical form.[6] Metrical rhythm, measured rhythm, and free rhythm are general classes of rhythm and may be distinguished in all aspects of temporality:[14]

  • Metrical rhythm, by far the most common class in Western music, is where each time value is a multiple or fraction of a fixed unit (beat, see paragraph below), and normal accents reoccur regularly, providing systematic grouping (bars, divisive rhythm).
  • Measured rhythm is where each time value is a multiple or fraction of a specified time unit but there are not regularly recurring accents (additive rhythm).
  • Free rhythm is where the time values are not based on any fixed unit; since the time values lack a fixed unit, regularly recurring accents are no longer a possibility.

Some music, including chant, has freer rhythm, like the rhythm of prose compared to that of verse.[1] Some music, such as some graphically scored works since the 1950s and non-European music such as Honkyoku repertoire for shakuhachi, may be considered ametric.[15] The music term senza misura is Italian for "without metre", meaning to play without a beat, using time (e.g. seconds elapsed on an ordinary clock) if necessary to determine how long it will take to play the bar.[16][page needed]

Metric structure includes metre, tempo, and all rhythmic aspects that produce temporal regularity or structure, against which the foreground details or durational patterns of any piece of music are projected.[17] Metric levels may be distinguished: the beat level is the metric level at which pulses are heard as the basic time unit of the piece.[citation needed] Faster levels are division levels, and slower levels are multiple levels.[17] A rhythmic unit is a durational pattern which occupies a period of time equivalent to a pulse or pulses on an underlying metric level.[citation needed]

Frequently encountered types of metre edit

Metres classified by the number of beats per measure edit

Duple and quadruple metre edit

In duple metre, each measure is divided into two beats, or a multiple thereof (quadruple metre).

For example, in the time signature 2
4
, each bar contains two (2) quarter-note (4) beats. In the time signature 6
8
, each bar contains two dotted-quarter-note beats.

 
 

Corresponding quadruple metres are 4
4
, which has four quarter-note beats per measure, and 12
8
, which has four dotted-quarter-note beats per bar.

 
 

Triple metre edit

Triple metre is a metre in which each bar is divided into three beats, or a multiple thereof. For example, in the time signature 3
4
, each bar contains three (3) quarter-note (4) beats, and with a time signature of 9
8
, each bar contains three dotted-quarter beats.

 
 

More than four beats edit

Metres with more than four beats are called quintuple metres (5), sextuple metres (6), septuple metres (7), etc.

In classical music theory it is presumed that only divisions of two or three are perceptually valid, so in metres not divisible by 2 or 3, such as quintuple metre, say 5
4
, is assumed to either be equivalent to a measure of 3
4
followed by a measure of 2
4
, or the opposite: 2
4
then 3
4
. Higher metres which are divisible by 2 or 3 are considered equivalent to groupings of tuple or triple metre measures, thus, 6
4
, for example, is rarely used because it is considered equivalent to two measures of 3
4
. See: hypermetre and additive rhythm and divisive rhythm.

Higher metres are used more commonly in analysis, if not performance, of cross-rhythms, as lowest number possible which may be used to count a polyrhythm is the lowest common denominator (LCD) of the two or more metric divisions. For example, much African music is recorded in Western notation as being in 12
8
, the LCD of 4 and 3.

Metres classified by the subdivisions of a beat edit

Simple metre and compound metre are distinguished by the way the beats are subdivided.

Simple metre edit

Simple metre (or simple time) is a metre in which each beat of the bar divides naturally into two (as opposed to three) equal parts. The top number in the time signature will be 2, 3, 4, 5, etc.

For example, in the time signature 3
4
, each bar contains three quarter-note beats, and each of those beats divides into two eighth notes, making it a simple metre. More specifically, it is a simple triple metre because there are three beats in each measure; simple duple (two beats) or simple quadruple (four) are also common metres.

 
 
 

Compound metre edit

Compound metre (or compound time), is a metre in which each beat of the bar divides naturally into three equal parts. That is, each beat contains a triple pulse.[18] The top number in the time signature will be 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 24, etc.

Compound metres are written with a time signature that shows the number of divisions of beats in each bar as opposed to the number of beats. For example, compound duple (two beats, each divided into three) is written as a time signature with a numerator of six, for example, 6
8
. Contrast this with the time signature 3
4
, which also assigns six eighth notes to each measure, but by convention connotes a simple triple time: 3 quarter-note beats.

Examples of compound metre include 6
8
(compound duple metre), 9
8
(compound triple metre), and 12
8
(compound quadruple metre).

 
 
 

Although 3
4
and 6
8
are not to be confused, they use bars of the same length, so it is easy to "slip" between them just by shifting the location of the accents. This interpretational switch has been exploited, for example, by Leonard Bernstein, in the song "America":

 
"I like to be in A-mer-i-ca" from West Side Story

Compound metre divided into three parts could theoretically be transcribed into musically equivalent simple metre using triplets. Likewise, simple metre can be shown in compound through duples. In practice, however, this is rarely done because it disrupts conducting patterns when the tempo changes. When conducting in 6
8
, conductors typically provide two beats per bar; however, all six beats may be performed when the tempo is very slow.

Compound time is associated with "lilting" and dancelike qualities. Folk dances often use compound time. Many Baroque dances are often in compound time: some gigues, the courante, and sometimes the passepied and the siciliana.

Metre in song edit

 
The German children's song "Drei Chinesen mit dem Kontrabass" shows a common fourfold multiplication of rhythmic phrases into a complete verse and melody.

The concept of metre in music derives in large part from the poetic metre of song and includes not only the basic rhythm of the foot, pulse-group or figure used but also the rhythmic or formal arrangement of such figures into musical phrases (lines, couplets) and of such phrases into melodies, passages or sections (stanzas, verses) to give what Holst (1963) calls "the time pattern of any song".[19]

Traditional and popular songs may draw heavily upon a limited range of metres, leading to interchangeability of melodies. Early hymnals commonly did not include musical notation but simply texts that could be sung to any tune known by the singers that had a matching metre. For example, The Blind Boys of Alabama rendered the hymn "Amazing Grace" to the setting of The Animals' version of the folk song "The House of the Rising Sun". This is possible because the texts share a popular basic four-line (quatrain) verse-form called ballad metre or, in hymnals, common metre, the four lines having a syllable-count of 8–6–8–6 (Hymns Ancient and Modern Revised), the rhyme-scheme usually following suit: ABAB. There is generally a pause in the melody in a cadence at the end of the shorter lines so that the underlying musical metre is 8–8–8–8 beats, the cadences dividing this musically into two symmetrical "normal" phrases of four bars each.[20]

In some regional music, for example Balkan music (like Bulgarian music, and the Macedonian 3+2+2+3+2 metre), a wealth of irregular or compound metres are used. Other terms for this are "additive metre"[21] and "imperfect time".[22][failed verification]

Metre in dance music edit

 
Typical figures of the waltz rhythm.[23]
 

Metre is often essential to any style of dance music, such as the waltz or tango, that has instantly recognizable patterns of beats built upon a characteristic tempo and bar. The Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing defines the tango, for example, as to be danced in 2
4
time at approximately 66 beats per minute. The basic slow step forwards or backwards, lasting for one beat, is called a "slow", so that a full "right–left" step is equal to one 2
4
bar.[24]

But step-figures such as turns, the corte and walk-ins also require "quick" steps of half the duration, each entire figure requiring 3–6 "slow" beats. Such figures may then be "amalgamated" to create a series of movements that may synchronise to an entire musical section or piece. This can be thought of as an equivalent of prosody (see also: prosody (music)).

Metre in classical music edit

In music of the common practice period (about 1600–1900), there are four different families of time signature in common use:

  • Simple duple: two or four beats to a bar, each divided by two, the top number being "2" or "4" (2
    4
    , 2
    8
    , 2
    2
    ... 4
    4
    , 4
    8
    , 4
    2
    ...). When there are four beats to a bar, it is alternatively referred to as "quadruple" time.
  • Simple triple: three beats to a bar, each divided by two, the top number being "3" (3
    4
    , 3
    8
    , 3
    2
    ...)
  • Compound duple: two beats to a bar, each divided by three, the top number being "6" (6
    8
    , 6
    16
    , 6
    4
    ...) Similarly compound quadruple, four beats to a bar, each divided by three, the top number being "12" (12
    8
    , 12
    16
    , 12
    4
    ...)
  • Compound triple: three beats to a bar, each divided by three, the top number being "9" (9
    8
    , 9
    16
    , 9
    4
    )

If the beat is divided into two the metre is simple, if divided into three it is compound. If each bar is divided into two it is duple and if into three it is triple. Some people also label quadruple, while some consider it as two duples. Any other division is considered additively, as a bar of five beats may be broken into duple+triple (12123) or triple+duple (12312) depending on accent. However, in some music, especially at faster tempos, it may be treated as one unit of five.

Changing metre edit

In 20th-century concert music, it became more common to switch metre—the end of Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring (shown below) is an example. This practice is sometimes called mixed metres.

 

A metric modulation is a modulation from one metric unit or metre to another.

The use of asymmetrical rhythms – sometimes called aksak rhythm (the Turkish word for "limping") – also became more common in the 20th century: such metres include quintuple as well as more complex additive metres along the lines of 2+2+3 time, where each bar has two 2-beat units and a 3-beat unit with a stress at the beginning of each unit. Similar metres are often used in Bulgarian folk dances and Indian classical music.

Hypermetre edit

 
Hypermetre: four-beat measure, four-bar hypermeasure, and four-hyperbar verses. Hyperbeats in red.
 
Opening of the third movement of Beethoven's Waldstein sonata. The melodic lines in bars 1–4 and 5–8 are (almost) identical, and both form hypermetric spans. The two hyperbeats are the low Cs, in the first and fifth bars of the example.

Hypermetre is large-scale metre (as opposed to smaller-scale metre). Hypermeasures consist of hyperbeats.[25] "Hypermeter is metre, with all its inherent characteristics, at the level where bars act as beats".[26] For example, the four-bar hypermeasures are the prototypical structure for country music, in and against which country songs work.[26] In some styles, two- and four-bar hypermetres are common.[citation needed]

The term was coined, together with "hypermeasures", by Edward T. Cone (1968), who regarded it as applying to a relatively small scale, conceiving of a still larger kind of gestural "rhythm" imparting a sense of "an extended upbeat followed by its downbeat"[27] London (2012) contends that in terms of multiple and simultaneous levels of metrical "entrainment" (evenly spaced temporal events "that we internalize and come to expect", p. 9), there is no in-principle distinction between metre and hypermetre; instead, they are the same phenomenon occurring at different levels.[28]

Lee (1985)[verification needed] and Middleton have described musical metre in terms of deep structure, using generative concepts to show how different metres (4
4
, 3
4
, etc.) generate many different surface rhythms.[citation needed] For example, the first phrase of The Beatles' "A Hard Day's Night", excluding the syncopation on "night", may be generated from its metre of 4
4
:[29]

4
4
4
4
4
4
2
4
2
4
2
4
2
4
2
4
2
4
1
4
1
4
1
8
1
8
1
8
1
8
               
It's been a hard day's night...

The syncopation may then be added, moving "night" forward one eighth note, and the first phrase is generated.[citation needed]

Polymetre edit

With polymetre, the bar sizes differ, but the beat remains constant. Since the beat is the same, the various metres eventually agree. (Four bars of 7
4
= seven bars of 4
4
). An example is the second moment, titled "Scherzo polimetrico", of Edmund Rubbra's Second String Quartet (1951), in which a constant triplet texture holds together overlapping bars of 9
8
, 12
8
, and 21
8
, and barlines rarely coincide in all four instruments.[30]

With polyrhythm, the number of beats varies within a fixed bar length. For example, in a 4:3 polyrhythm, one part plays 4
4
while the other plays 3
4
, but the 3
4
beats are stretched so that three beats of 3
4
are played in the same time as four beats of 4
4
.[citation needed] More generally, sometimes rhythms are combined in a way that is neither tactus nor bar preserving—the beat differs and the bar size also differs. See Polytempi.[citation needed]

Research into the perception of polymetre shows that listeners often either extract a composite pattern that is fitted to a metric framework, or focus on one rhythmic stream while treating others as "noise". This is consistent with the Gestalt psychology tenet that "the figure–ground dichotomy is fundamental to all perception".[31][verification needed][32] In the music, the two metres will meet each other after a specific number of beats. For example, a 3
4
metre and 4
4
metre will meet after 12 beats.

In "Toads of the Short Forest" (from the album Weasels Ripped My Flesh), composer Frank Zappa explains: "At this very moment on stage we have drummer A playing in 7
8
, drummer B playing in 3
4
, the bass playing in 3
4
, the organ playing in 5
8
, the tambourine playing in 3
4
,[clarification needed] and the alto sax blowing his nose".[33] "Touch And Go", a hit single by The Cars, has polymetric verses, with the drums and bass playing in 5
4
, while the guitar, synthesizer, and vocals are in 4
4
(the choruses are entirely in 4
4
).[34] Magma uses extensively 7
8
on 2
4
(e.g. Mëkanïk Dëstruktïẁ Kömmandöh) and some other combinations. King Crimson's albums of the eighties have several songs that use polymetre of various combinations.[citation needed]

Polymetres are a defining characteristic of the music of Meshuggah, whose compositions often feature unconventionally timed rhythm figures cycling over a 4
4
base.[35]

Examples edit

Polymetres
Beat-preserving polymetre 5
4
with 4
4
Beat-preserving polymetre 5
4
with 3
4
Measure-preserving polyrhythm 3
4
with 4
4
Beat-preserving polymetre 2
4
with 3
8
Beat-preserving polymetre 4
4
with 5
8
Beat-preserving polymetre 4
4
with 7
8
Measure-preserving polyrhythm 2:3
Measure-preserving polyrhythm 4:3
Measure-preserving polyrhythm 5:4
Various metres
6
8
at tempo of 90 bpm
9
8
at tempo of 90 bpm
12
8
at tempo of 90 bpm
2
4
at a tempo of 60 bpm
3
4
at a tempo of 60 bpm
4
4
at a tempo of 60 bpm

See also edit

References edit

Sources edit

  • Anon. (1983). Ballroom Dancing. Teach Yourself. Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing. Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 978-0-340-22517-2.
  • Benward, Bruce, and Marilyn Nadine Saker (2003). Music: In Theory and Practice, Vol. 1, seventh edition. Boston: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-294262-2.
  • Berry, David Carson, and Sherman Van Solkema (2013). "Theory". The Grove Dictionary of American Music, second edition, edited by Charles Hiroshi Garrett. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-531428-1.
  • Boring, Edwin G. (1942). Sensation and Perception in the History of Experimental Psychology. New York: Appleton-Century.
  • Cars, The (1981). Panorama (songbook). New York: Warner Bros. Publications.
  • Cone, Edward T. (1968). Musical Form and Musical Performance. New York: Norton. ISBN 978-0-39309767-2.
  • Cooper, Grosvenor; Meyer, Leonard B. (1960). The Rhythmic Structure of Music. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-11521-6. OCLC 1139523.
  • Cooper, Paul (1973). Perspectives in Music Theory: An Historical-Analytical Approach. New York: Dodd, Mead. ISBN 0-396-06752-2.
  • Forney, Kristine, and Joseph Machlis (2007). The Enjoyment of Music: An Introduction to Perceptive Listening, tenth edition. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-92885-3 (cloth); ISBN 978-0-393-17410-6 (text with DVD); ISBN 978-0-393-92888-4 (pbk.); ISBN 978-0-393-10757-9 (DVD)
  • Holst, Imogen (1963). The ABC of Music: A Short Practical Guide to the Basic Essentials of Rudiments, Harmony, and Form'. Benjamin Britten (foreword). London & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-317103-1.
  • Hoppin, Richard H. 1978. Medieval Music. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-09090-6.
  • Karpinski, Gary S. (2000). Aural Skills Acquisition: The Development of Listening, Reading, and Performing Skills in College-Level Musicians. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511785-9.
  • Krebs, Harald (2005). "Hypermeter and Hypermetric Irregularity in the Songs of Josephine Lang.". In Deborah Stein (ed.). Engaging Music: Essays in Music Analysis. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-517010-5.
  • Latham, Alison (2002a). "Compound Time [Compound Metre]". In Alison Latham (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Music. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866212-2.
  • Latham, Alison (2002b). "Metre". In Alison Latham (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Music. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866212-2.
  • Lee, C. S. (1985). "The Rhythmic Interpretation of Simple Musical Sequences: Towards a Perceptual Model". In Peter Howell; Ian Cross; Robert West (eds.). Musical Structure and Cognition. London: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12357170-0.
  • Lester, Joel (1986). The Rhythms of Tonal Music. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-1282-4.
  • London, Justin (2001). "Rhythm". In Stanley Sadie; John Tyrrell (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan.
  • London, Justin (2004). Hearing in Time: Psychological Aspects of Musical Meter (first ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-516081-9.
  • London, Justin (2012). Hearing in Time: Psychological Aspects of Musical Meter (second ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-974437-4.
  • MacPherson, Stewart (1930). Form in Music. London: Joseph Williams Ltd.
  • Merriam-Webster (2015). "Measure". Dictionary. New York.
  • Middleton, Richard (1990). Studying Popular Music. Milton Keynes: Open University Press. ISBN 978-0-33515276-6.
  • Mothers of Invention, The (1970), Weasels Ripped My Flesh (LP), Bizarre Records / Reprise Records, MS 2028 at Discogs (list of releases)
  • Neal, Jocelyn (2000). "Songwriter's Signature, Artist's Imprint: The Metric Structure of a Country Song". In Wolfe, Charles K.; Akenson, James E. (eds.). Country Music Annual 2000. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-0989-2.
  • Pieslak, Jonathan (2007). "Re-casting Metal: Rhythm and Meter in the Music of Meshuggah". Music Theory Spectrum. 29 (2): 219–45. doi:10.1525/mts.2007.29.2.219.
  • Read, Gardner (1964). Music Notation: A Manual of Modern Practice. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
  • Rubbra, Edmund (1953). "String Quartet No. 2 in E-flat, Op. 73: An Analytical Note by the Composer." The Music Review 14:36–44.
  • Scholes, Percy (1977). John Owen Ward (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Music. 6th corrected reprint of the 10th ed. (1970), revised and reset. London and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-311306-6., chapters "Metre" and "Rhythm"
  • Scruton, Roger (1997). The Aesthetics of Music. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 25ex2.6. ISBN 0-19-816638-9.
  • Wittlich, Gary E., ed. (1975). Aspects of Twentieth-century Music. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-049346-5.
  • Yeston, Maury (1976). The Stratification of Musical Rhythm. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-01884-3.

Further reading edit

  • Anon. (1999). "Polymeter." Baker's Student Encyclopedia of Music, 3 vols., ed. Laura Kuhn. New York: Schirmer-Thomson Gale; London: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-02-865315-7. Online version 2006: 27 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Anon. [2001]. "Polyrhythm". Grove Music Online. (Accessed 4 April 2009)
  • Hindemith, Paul (1974). Elementary Training for Musicians, second edition (rev. 1949). Mainz, London, and New York: Schott. ISBN 0-901938-16-5.
  • Honing, Henkjan (2002). "Structure and Interpretation of Rhythm and Timing." Tijdschrift voor Muziektheorie 7(3):227–232. (pdf)
  • Larson, Steve (2006). "Rhythmic Displacement in the Music of Bill Evans". In Structure and Meaning in Tonal Music: Festschrift in Honor of Carl Schachter, edited by L. Poundie Burstein and David Gagné, 103–122. Harmonologia Series, no. 12. Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press. ISBN 1-57647-112-8.
  • Waters, Keith (1996). "Blurring the Barline: Metric Displacement in the Piano Solos of Herbie Hancock". Annual Review of Jazz Studies 8:19–37.

metre, music, music, metre, british, spelling, meter, american, spelling, refers, regularly, recurring, patterns, accents, such, bars, beats, unlike, rhythm, metric, onsets, necessarily, sounded, nevertheless, implied, performer, performers, expected, listener. In music metre British spelling or meter American spelling refers to regularly recurring patterns and accents such as bars and beats Unlike rhythm metric onsets are not necessarily sounded but are nevertheless implied by the performer or performers and expected by the listener not verified in body Musical and lyric metre A variety of systems exist throughout the world for organising and playing metrical music such as the Indian system of tala and similar systems in Arabic and African music Western music inherited the concept of metre from poetry 1 2 where it denotes the number of lines in a verse the number of syllables in each line and the arrangement of those syllables as long or short accented or unaccented 1 2 The first coherent system of rhythmic notation in modern Western music was based on rhythmic modes derived from the basic types of metrical unit in the quantitative metre of classical ancient Greek and Latin poetry 3 Later music for dances such as the pavane and galliard consisted of musical phrases to accompany a fixed sequence of basic steps with a defined tempo and time signature The English word measure originally an exact or just amount of time came to denote either a poetic rhythm a bar of music or else an entire melodic verse or dance 4 involving sequences of notes words or movements that may last four eight or sixteen bars citation needed Metre is related to and distinguished from pulse rhythm grouping and beats Meter is the measurement of the number of pulses between more or less regularly recurring accents Therefore in order for meter to exist some of the pulses in a series must be accented marked for consciousness relative to others When pulses are thus counted within a metric context they are referred to as beats 5 Contents 1 Metric structure 2 Frequently encountered types of metre 2 1 Metres classified by the number of beats per measure 2 1 1 Duple and quadruple metre 2 1 2 Triple metre 2 1 3 More than four beats 2 2 Metres classified by the subdivisions of a beat 2 2 1 Simple metre 2 2 2 Compound metre 3 Metre in song 4 Metre in dance music 5 Metre in classical music 5 1 Changing metre 6 Hypermetre 7 Polymetre 7 1 Examples 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further readingMetric structure editThe term metre is not very precisely defined 1 Stewart MacPherson preferred to speak of time and rhythmic shape 6 while Imogen Holst preferred measured rhythm 7 However Justin London has written a book about musical metre which involves our initial perception as well as subsequent anticipation of a series of beats that we abstract from the rhythm surface of the music as it unfolds in time 8 This perception and abstraction of rhythmic bar is the foundation of human instinctive musical participation as when we divide a series of identical clock ticks into tick tock tick tock 1 Rhythms of recurrence arise from the interaction of two levels of motion the faster providing the pulse and the slower organizing the beats into repetitive groups 9 In his book The Rhythms of Tonal Music Joel Lester notes that o nce a metric hierarchy has been established we as listeners will maintain that organization as long as minimal evidence is present 10 nbsp Metric levels beat level shown in middle with division levels above and multiple levels below Meter may be defined as a regular recurring pattern of strong and weak beats This recurring pattern of durations is identified at the beginning of a composition by a meter signature time signature Although meter is generally indicated by time signatures it is important to realize that meter is not simply a matter of notation 11 A definition of musical metre requires the possibility of identifying a repeating pattern of accented pulses a pulse group which corresponds to the foot in poetry citation needed Frequently a pulse group can be identified by taking the accented beat as the first pulse in the group and counting the pulses until the next accent 12 1 Frequently metres can be subdivided into a pattern of duples and triples 12 1 For example a 34 metre consists of three units of a 28 pulse group and a 68 metre consists of two units of a 38 pulse group In turn metric bars may comprise metric groups for example a musical phrase or melody might consist of two bars x 34 13 The level of musical organisation implied by musical metre includes the most elementary levels of musical form 6 Metrical rhythm measured rhythm and free rhythm are general classes of rhythm and may be distinguished in all aspects of temporality 14 Metrical rhythm by far the most common class in Western music is where each time value is a multiple or fraction of a fixed unit beat see paragraph below and normal accents reoccur regularly providing systematic grouping bars divisive rhythm Measured rhythm is where each time value is a multiple or fraction of a specified time unit but there are not regularly recurring accents additive rhythm Free rhythm is where the time values are not based on any fixed unit since the time values lack a fixed unit regularly recurring accents are no longer a possibility Some music including chant has freer rhythm like the rhythm of prose compared to that of verse 1 Some music such as some graphically scored works since the 1950s and non European music such as Honkyoku repertoire for shakuhachi may be considered ametric 15 The music term senza misura is Italian for without metre meaning to play without a beat using time e g seconds elapsed on an ordinary clock if necessary to determine how long it will take to play the bar 16 page needed Metric structure includes metre tempo and all rhythmic aspects that produce temporal regularity or structure against which the foreground details or durational patterns of any piece of music are projected 17 Metric levels may be distinguished the beat level is the metric level at which pulses are heard as the basic time unit of the piece citation needed Faster levels are division levels and slower levels are multiple levels 17 A rhythmic unit is a durational pattern which occupies a period of time equivalent to a pulse or pulses on an underlying metric level citation needed Frequently encountered types of metre editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Metre music news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Metres classified by the number of beats per measure edit Duple and quadruple metre edit In duple metre each measure is divided into two beats or a multiple thereof quadruple metre For example in the time signature 24 each bar contains two 2 quarter note 4 beats In the time signature 68 each bar contains two dotted quarter note beats nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Corresponding quadruple metres are 44 which has four quarter note beats per measure and 128 which has four dotted quarter note beats per bar nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Triple metre edit Triple metre is a metre in which each bar is divided into three beats or a multiple thereof For example in the time signature 34 each bar contains three 3 quarter note 4 beats and with a time signature of 98 each bar contains three dotted quarter beats nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file More than four beats edit Metres with more than four beats are called quintuple metres 5 sextuple metres 6 septuple metres 7 etc In classical music theory it is presumed that only divisions of two or three are perceptually valid so in metres not divisible by 2 or 3 such as quintuple metre say 54 is assumed to either be equivalent to a measure of 34 followed by a measure of 24 or the opposite 24 then 34 Higher metres which are divisible by 2 or 3 are considered equivalent to groupings of tuple or triple metre measures thus 64 for example is rarely used because it is considered equivalent to two measures of 34 See hypermetre and additive rhythm and divisive rhythm Higher metres are used more commonly in analysis if not performance of cross rhythms as lowest number possible which may be used to count a polyrhythm is the lowest common denominator LCD of the two or more metric divisions For example much African music is recorded in Western notation as being in 128 the LCD of 4 and 3 Metres classified by the subdivisions of a beat edit Simple metre and compound metre are distinguished by the way the beats are subdivided Simple metre edit Simple metre or simple time is a metre in which each beat of the bar divides naturally into two as opposed to three equal parts The top number in the time signature will be 2 3 4 5 etc For example in the time signature 34 each bar contains three quarter note beats and each of those beats divides into two eighth notes making it a simple metre More specifically it is a simple triple metre because there are three beats in each measure simple duple two beats or simple quadruple four are also common metres nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Compound metre edit Compound metre or compound time is a metre in which each beat of the bar divides naturally into three equal parts That is each beat contains a triple pulse 18 The top number in the time signature will be 6 9 12 15 18 24 etc Compound metres are written with a time signature that shows the number of divisions of beats in each bar as opposed to the number of beats For example compound duple two beats each divided into three is written as a time signature with a numerator of six for example 68 Contrast this with the time signature 34 which also assigns six eighth notes to each measure but by convention connotes a simple triple time 3 quarter note beats Examples of compound metre include 68 compound duple metre 98 compound triple metre and 128 compound quadruple metre nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Although 34 and 68 are not to be confused they use bars of the same length so it is easy to slip between them just by shifting the location of the accents This interpretational switch has been exploited for example by Leonard Bernstein in the song America nbsp I like to be in A mer i ca from West Side Story source source source Compound metre divided into three parts could theoretically be transcribed into musically equivalent simple metre using triplets Likewise simple metre can be shown in compound through duples In practice however this is rarely done because it disrupts conducting patterns when the tempo changes When conducting in 68 conductors typically provide two beats per bar however all six beats may be performed when the tempo is very slow Compound time is associated with lilting and dancelike qualities Folk dances often use compound time Many Baroque dances are often in compound time some gigues the courante and sometimes the passepied and the siciliana Metre in song editSee also Musical form Levels of organization nbsp The German children s song Drei Chinesen mit dem Kontrabass shows a common fourfold multiplication of rhythmic phrases into a complete verse and melody source source source The concept of metre in music derives in large part from the poetic metre of song and includes not only the basic rhythm of the foot pulse group or figure used but also the rhythmic or formal arrangement of such figures into musical phrases lines couplets and of such phrases into melodies passages or sections stanzas verses to give what Holst 1963 calls the time pattern of any song 19 Traditional and popular songs may draw heavily upon a limited range of metres leading to interchangeability of melodies Early hymnals commonly did not include musical notation but simply texts that could be sung to any tune known by the singers that had a matching metre For example The Blind Boys of Alabama rendered the hymn Amazing Grace to the setting of The Animals version of the folk song The House of the Rising Sun This is possible because the texts share a popular basic four line quatrain verse form called ballad metre or in hymnals common metre the four lines having a syllable count of 8 6 8 6 Hymns Ancient and Modern Revised the rhyme scheme usually following suit ABAB There is generally a pause in the melody in a cadence at the end of the shorter lines so that the underlying musical metre is 8 8 8 8 beats the cadences dividing this musically into two symmetrical normal phrases of four bars each 20 In some regional music for example Balkan music like Bulgarian music and the Macedonian 3 2 2 3 2 metre a wealth of irregular or compound metres are used Other terms for this are additive metre 21 and imperfect time 22 failed verification Metre in dance music editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Typical figures of the waltz rhythm 23 nbsp nbsp Dance from Terpsichore Michael Praetorius 1612 Volte source source Includes regular metre followed by an irregular metre Problems playing this file See media help Metre is often essential to any style of dance music such as the waltz or tango that has instantly recognizable patterns of beats built upon a characteristic tempo and bar The Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing defines the tango for example as to be danced in 24 time at approximately 66 beats per minute The basic slow step forwards or backwards lasting for one beat is called a slow so that a full right left step is equal to one 24 bar 24 But step figures such as turns the corte and walk ins also require quick steps of half the duration each entire figure requiring 3 6 slow beats Such figures may then be amalgamated to create a series of movements that may synchronise to an entire musical section or piece This can be thought of as an equivalent of prosody see also prosody music Metre in classical music editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In music of the common practice period about 1600 1900 there are four different families of time signature in common use Simple duple two or four beats to a bar each divided by two the top number being 2 or 4 24 28 22 44 48 42 When there are four beats to a bar it is alternatively referred to as quadruple time Simple triple three beats to a bar each divided by two the top number being 3 34 38 32 Compound duple two beats to a bar each divided by three the top number being 6 68 616 64 Similarly compound quadruple four beats to a bar each divided by three the top number being 12 128 1216 124 Compound triple three beats to a bar each divided by three the top number being 9 98 916 94 If the beat is divided into two the metre is simple if divided into three it is compound If each bar is divided into two it is duple and if into three it is triple Some people also label quadruple while some consider it as two duples Any other division is considered additively as a bar of five beats may be broken into duple triple 12123 or triple duple 12312 depending on accent However in some music especially at faster tempos it may be treated as one unit of five Changing metre edit In 20th century concert music it became more common to switch metre the end of Igor Stravinsky s The Rite of Spring shown below is an example This practice is sometimes called mixed metres nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file A metric modulation is a modulation from one metric unit or metre to another The use of asymmetrical rhythms sometimes called aksak rhythm the Turkish word for limping also became more common in the 20th century such metres include quintuple as well as more complex additive metres along the lines of 2 2 3 time where each bar has two 2 beat units and a 3 beat unit with a stress at the beginning of each unit Similar metres are often used in Bulgarian folk dances and Indian classical music Hypermetre edit nbsp Hypermetre four beat measure four bar hypermeasure and four hyperbar verses Hyperbeats in red nbsp Opening of the third movement of Beethoven s Waldstein sonata The melodic lines in bars 1 4 and 5 8 are almost identical and both form hypermetric spans The two hyperbeats are the low Cs in the first and fifth bars of the example source source source Hypermetre is large scale metre as opposed to smaller scale metre Hypermeasures consist of hyperbeats 25 Hypermeter is metre with all its inherent characteristics at the level where bars act as beats 26 For example the four bar hypermeasures are the prototypical structure for country music in and against which country songs work 26 In some styles two and four bar hypermetres are common citation needed The term was coined together with hypermeasures by Edward T Cone 1968 who regarded it as applying to a relatively small scale conceiving of a still larger kind of gestural rhythm imparting a sense of an extended upbeat followed by its downbeat 27 London 2012 contends that in terms of multiple and simultaneous levels of metrical entrainment evenly spaced temporal events that we internalize and come to expect p 9 there is no in principle distinction between metre and hypermetre instead they are the same phenomenon occurring at different levels 28 Lee 1985 verification needed and Middleton have described musical metre in terms of deep structure using generative concepts to show how different metres 44 34 etc generate many different surface rhythms citation needed For example the first phrase of The Beatles A Hard Day s Night excluding the syncopation on night may be generated from its metre of 44 29 44 44 44 24 24 24 24 24 24 14 14 18 18 18 18 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp It s been a hard day s night source source source The syncopation may then be added moving night forward one eighth note and the first phrase is generated citation needed Polymetre editSee also Polyrhythm With polymetre the bar sizes differ but the beat remains constant Since the beat is the same the various metres eventually agree Four bars of 74 seven bars of 44 An example is the second moment titled Scherzo polimetrico of Edmund Rubbra s Second String Quartet 1951 in which a constant triplet texture holds together overlapping bars of 98 128 and 218 and barlines rarely coincide in all four instruments 30 With polyrhythm the number of beats varies within a fixed bar length For example in a 4 3 polyrhythm one part plays 44 while the other plays 34 but the 34 beats are stretched so that three beats of 34 are played in the same time as four beats of 44 citation needed More generally sometimes rhythms are combined in a way that is neither tactus nor bar preserving the beat differs and the bar size also differs See Polytempi citation needed Research into the perception of polymetre shows that listeners often either extract a composite pattern that is fitted to a metric framework or focus on one rhythmic stream while treating others as noise This is consistent with the Gestalt psychology tenet that the figure ground dichotomy is fundamental to all perception 31 verification needed 32 In the music the two metres will meet each other after a specific number of beats For example a 34 metre and 44 metre will meet after 12 beats In Toads of the Short Forest from the album Weasels Ripped My Flesh composer Frank Zappa explains At this very moment on stage we have drummer A playing in 78 drummer B playing in 34 the bass playing in 34 the organ playing in 58 the tambourine playing in 34 clarification needed and the alto sax blowing his nose 33 Touch And Go a hit single by The Cars has polymetric verses with the drums and bass playing in 54 while the guitar synthesizer and vocals are in 44 the choruses are entirely in 44 34 Magma uses extensively 78 on 24 e g Mekanik Destruktiẁ Kommandoh and some other combinations King Crimson s albums of the eighties have several songs that use polymetre of various combinations citation needed Polymetres are a defining characteristic of the music of Meshuggah whose compositions often feature unconventionally timed rhythm figures cycling over a 44 base 35 Examples edit Polymetres source source source source Beat preserving polymetre 54 with 44 source source source source Beat preserving polymetre 54 with 34 source source source source Measure preserving polyrhythm 34 with 44 source source source source Beat preserving polymetre 24 with 38 source source source source Beat preserving polymetre 44 with 58 source source source source Beat preserving polymetre 44 with 78 source source source source source source Measure preserving polyrhythm 2 3 source source source source source source Measure preserving polyrhythm 4 3 source source source source source source Measure preserving polyrhythm 5 4 Various metres source source source source 68 at tempo of 90 bpm source source source source 98 at tempo of 90 bpm source source source source 128 at tempo of 90 bpm source source source source 24 at a tempo of 60 bpm source source source source 34 at a tempo of 60 bpm source source source source track 44 at a tempo of 60 bpmSee also editMetre hymn Metre poetry Hymn tune List of musical works in unusual time signaturesReferences edit a b c d e f g Scholes 1977 a b Latham 2002b Hoppin 1978 221 Merriam Webster 2015 Cooper amp Meyer 1960 p 3 a b MacPherson 1930 3 Holst 1963 17 London 2004 4 Yeston 1976 50 52 Lester 1986 77 Benward and Saker 2003 9 a b MacPherson 1930 5 Cooper amp Meyer 1960 p page needed Cooper 1973 30 Karpinski 2000 19 Forney and Machlis 2007 a b Wittlich 1975 ch 3 Latham 2002a Holst 1963 18 MacPherson 1930 14 London 2001 I 8 Read 1964 147 Scruton 1997 Anon 1983 p page needed Stein 2005 329 a b Neal 2000 115 Berry and Van Solkema 2013 5 vi London 2012 25 Middleton 1990 211 Rubbra 1953 41 Boring 1942 253 London 2004 49 50 Mothers of Invention 1970 Cars 1981 15 Pieslak 2007 Sources edit Anon 1983 Ballroom Dancing Teach Yourself Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing Hodder and Stoughton ISBN 978 0 340 22517 2 Benward Bruce and Marilyn Nadine Saker 2003 Music In Theory and Practice Vol 1 seventh edition Boston McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 294262 2 Berry David Carson and Sherman Van Solkema 2013 Theory The Grove Dictionary of American Music second edition edited by Charles Hiroshi Garrett New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 531428 1 Boring Edwin G 1942 Sensation and Perception in the History of Experimental Psychology New York Appleton Century Cars The 1981 Panorama songbook New York Warner Bros Publications Cone Edward T 1968 Musical Form and Musical Performance New York Norton ISBN 978 0 39309767 2 Cooper Grosvenor Meyer Leonard B 1960 The Rhythmic Structure of Music Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 11521 6 OCLC 1139523 Cooper Paul 1973 Perspectives in Music Theory An Historical Analytical Approach New York Dodd Mead ISBN 0 396 06752 2 Forney Kristine and Joseph Machlis 2007 The Enjoyment of Music An Introduction to Perceptive Listening tenth edition New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 92885 3 cloth ISBN 978 0 393 17410 6 text with DVD ISBN 978 0 393 92888 4 pbk ISBN 978 0 393 10757 9 DVD Holst Imogen 1963 The ABC of Music A Short Practical Guide to the Basic Essentials of Rudiments Harmony and Form Benjamin Britten foreword London amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 317103 1 Hoppin Richard H 1978 Medieval Music New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 09090 6 Karpinski Gary S 2000 Aural Skills Acquisition The Development of Listening Reading and Performing Skills in College Level Musicians Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511785 9 Krebs Harald 2005 Hypermeter and Hypermetric Irregularity in the Songs of Josephine Lang In Deborah Stein ed Engaging Music Essays in Music Analysis New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 517010 5 Latham Alison 2002a Compound Time Compound Metre In Alison Latham ed The Oxford Companion to Music Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 866212 2 Latham Alison 2002b Metre In Alison Latham ed The Oxford Companion to Music Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 866212 2 Lee C S 1985 The Rhythmic Interpretation of Simple Musical Sequences Towards a Perceptual Model In Peter Howell Ian Cross Robert West eds Musical Structure and Cognition London Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12357170 0 Lester Joel 1986 The Rhythms of Tonal Music Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 0 8093 1282 4 London Justin 2001 Rhythm In Stanley Sadie John Tyrrell eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan London Justin 2004 Hearing in Time Psychological Aspects of Musical Meter first ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 516081 9 London Justin 2012 Hearing in Time Psychological Aspects of Musical Meter second ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 974437 4 MacPherson Stewart 1930 Form in Music London Joseph Williams Ltd Merriam Webster 2015 Measure Dictionary New York Middleton Richard 1990 Studying Popular Music Milton Keynes Open University Press ISBN 978 0 33515276 6 Mothers of Invention The 1970 Weasels Ripped My Flesh LP Bizarre Records Reprise Records MS 2028 at Discogs list of releases Neal Jocelyn 2000 Songwriter s Signature Artist s Imprint The Metric Structure of a Country Song In Wolfe Charles K Akenson James E eds Country Music Annual 2000 Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 0989 2 Pieslak Jonathan 2007 Re casting Metal Rhythm and Meter in the Music of Meshuggah Music Theory Spectrum 29 2 219 45 doi 10 1525 mts 2007 29 2 219 Read Gardner 1964 Music Notation A Manual of Modern Practice Boston Allyn and Bacon Rubbra Edmund 1953 String Quartet No 2 in E flat Op 73 An Analytical Note by the Composer The Music Review 14 36 44 Scholes Percy 1977 John Owen Ward ed The Oxford Companion to Music 6th corrected reprint of the 10th ed 1970 revised and reset London and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 311306 6 chapters Metre and Rhythm Scruton Roger 1997 The Aesthetics of Music Oxford Clarendon Press p 25ex2 6 ISBN 0 19 816638 9 Wittlich Gary E ed 1975 Aspects of Twentieth century Music Englewood Cliffs New Jersey Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 049346 5 Yeston Maury 1976 The Stratification of Musical Rhythm New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 01884 3 Further reading editAnon 1999 Polymeter Baker s Student Encyclopedia of Music 3 vols ed Laura Kuhn New York Schirmer Thomson Gale London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 02 865315 7 Online version 2006 Archived 27 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Anon 2001 Polyrhythm Grove Music Online Accessed 4 April 2009 Hindemith Paul 1974 Elementary Training for Musicians second edition rev 1949 Mainz London and New York Schott ISBN 0 901938 16 5 Honing Henkjan 2002 Structure and Interpretation of Rhythm and Timing Tijdschrift voor Muziektheorie 7 3 227 232 pdf Larson Steve 2006 Rhythmic Displacement in the Music of Bill Evans In Structure and Meaning in Tonal Music Festschrift in Honor of Carl Schachter edited by L Poundie Burstein and David Gagne 103 122 Harmonologia Series no 12 Hillsdale New York Pendragon Press ISBN 1 57647 112 8 Waters Keith 1996 Blurring the Barline Metric Displacement in the Piano Solos of Herbie Hancock Annual Review of Jazz Studies 8 19 37 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metre music amp oldid 1218970119 Polymetre, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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